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Thema: Review HP EliteBook 8470p Notebook (Gelesen 6850 mal)

Business and more? About a year ago we put the predecessor model, the 8460p, to the test. The manufacturer HP now introduces the Elitebook 8470p as the successor, although it has the same old look, the internal components have been revamped.

AlexRmF

the warranty for all Elitebooks is actually 3 years, only the battery receives a 1 year warranty, but the machine itself has a 3 year warrantytaken for HPs website:HP Services offers limited 3-year and 1-year standard parts and labor warranty, pick-up or carry-in, and toll-free 24x7 hardware technical phone support (depending on model)1-year limited warranty on primary batteryOn-site service and warranty upgrades are also available.

zu

hate it! When I use the keyboard it drives me crazy to write something. Cursor jumps sort of randomly around text (maybe due to my palm being close to touchpad). This is the worst notebook I ever had when it comes to typing.

Tien

This laptop has the worst usability. The touch doesn't response to my touch, but my palm hovering will move the mouse. No HDMI, but thank goodness for the stupid phone jack! It's like a retro back to the 90' laptop design. No external volume control, but thank goodness for browser quick button. Who design this thing? Better yet, who would buy this thing. Oh that's right, my super smart IT department.

JN

Been using my 8470p (i7-3540, Win7 x64) for a week. Was a Dell Latitude user for the previous 15 years. Absolutely love the 8470p. Terrific keyboard and touchpad. Build quality is top notch. 2nd hard drive module is SATA connected (vs. USB) and, as such, is very fast. HP SoftPaq tool makes getting the latest drivers VERY easy. Mine is set up dual-boot: primary drive is Win7 Enterprise X64, secondary, 750 GB Module is Win8.1. Both work great.

Wish the trackpoint had a middle scroller button like the Thinkpad and EliteBook Mobile Workstation models. The little LED light at the top of LCD that is supposed to light up the keyboard is a joke. The ThinkPad models have a much brighter one. Disappointed that the WiFi Button (dedicated button above the Pause/Break button) doesn't include options to control WiFi, WiFi+BT, or BT only like it did with the Dell Latitude series - if you press the button, it turns of WiFi AND BT, no choice.

Tips:

* Spend the extra on the Intel Centrino 6300 WiFi adapter. It is WELL worth it.* Learn how to use the SoftPaq utility to get the latest drivers.* Don't spend the extra on the discrete graphics. The Intel integrated graphics are very close in performance and will save battery life and dollars.

Henyei Csongor

Worst keyboard ever used. Small, unusable cursor keys (especially up-down), even distances among keys forces user to always check which button do they press. It is not by chance that over the decades the function keys are divided into 3 sections.

Sukebe

Worst laptop ever!I hate I hate I hate it.I looked for an article about it and found this one, even if it's a 3 yo article I'm just here to rant.It's the heaviest piece of crap ever builtCan't wait for the day I lose it.

Paul H

TO thos eof you complaining about the lack of an HDMI socket , this is a commercial laptop , it is not designed for consumers . It has a display port socket which is superior in everyway over HDMI . HDMI runs one screen only , Displayport is designed for a multitude of displays from 1 output .

Yes it has a modem , again it is a corporate machine , a sales guy staying at a hotel on business in the northern territory might not have wifi or high speed available but most places on the planet have a phone line in a pinch .

It is not designed to be slim , cute looking , good on batteries , carry a spare if you travel and want more battery time . It is however built like a tank and designed to be resilient and last for around a decade , this it will do VERY well .